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As Michigan State prepares for a Big Ten matchup with No. 6 Illinois, Spartans coach Tom Izzo has a big decision in front of him. The problem is, he has no idea how to make it.

That decision centers around MSU guard Jeremy Fears Jr., who is under fire for a series of underhanded plays against Minnesota in a 76-73 loss. Arguably the most notable was a backwards kick while trying to create space from Golden Gophers forward Langston Reynolds, resulting in a technical foul. And all of this came just days after Michigan coach Dusty May called out Fears’ play as ‘dangerous.’

Izzo, after the game, did not mince words. He said he wasn’t sure he was going to start Fears against Illinois in Feb. 7’s prime-time game, but comments on Feb. 6 indicate that threat may have been empty.

“I’ve looked at everything with Jeremy, and I can’t say like you normally do,” Izzo said, per the Detroit Free Press, part of the USA TODAY network. “I talked about not starting him and bringing him in, suspending him for a half. And then I looked at the whole situation, and I’m still not sure what I’m gonna do. And that’s the honest-to-God truth. And the only reason I’m not is because I gotta make sure that what is reported is always different than what actually happened.’

Izzo added Fears’ kick was largely retaliatory, something he was taking into consideration during his decision-making process.

‘I did not like the backward kick, OK?’ Izzo said. ‘He was pushed, he did that. Sometimes, those are reactionary.’

Izzo talked about Fears at length, praising his acumen in the classroom and the fact that the passion that got him in trouble is also the passion that makes him a strong player for the Spartans.

The timing, for Michigan State, is poor. A season-ending injury to Divine Ugochukwu has left Michigan State extremely thin at point guard, something Izzo did point out will not be a factor in whatever decision he makes.

With all of that in mind, there’s a very good chance Fears continues to start against Illinois despite the controversy. Which means the college basketball viewing world’s — and Izzo’s — eyes will be fixated firmly on No. 1, to condemn or vindicate the Hall of Fame coach’s decision.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

They bring out personalities with whom we identify and bring us inspiration: The 40-something moms who bobsled and hope they packed enough diapers, the little girl who lost her leg to cancer but has learned to excel on the mountain.

They show us athletic events we don’t always see in our lives, and give us fresh ideas to try.

“There’s well over 50 (events) in the Winter and Summer Olympics,” says Dustin Williams, the assistant director of Olympic sports medicine and the head athletic trainer for track and cross country at Brigham Young University. “My advice is don’t be afraid to try something new because you never know if that’s going to be what you fall into.

‘There’s so many opportunities. Different athletes always talk about how they’re doing well at this event or sport because of their background. Many athletes that I’ve worked with, especially (at) bobsled and skeleton, talk about how it was their track and field background that’s now helped them to excel.”

Williams was speaking at a virtual media briefing hosted by the National Athletic Trainers’ Association last fall. The intent was to try to emphasize a diversity of activities for youth athletes to stimulate overall health and prevent injuries.

Winter Olympic-style activities are an excellent way to change up your routine and take a break from our primary sport before spring season begins. Modifying the events we watch on TV can help kids develop motor skills, control their bodies and build confidence through movement.

We don’t have to hit the bobsled track or find a steep mountain. Here are five easier suggestions:

Indoor curling

Our own Chris Bumbaca tried it before he left to cover the Games in Italy:

During the session with Chris Plys, a Team USA bronze medalist at curling at the 2022 Games, Bumbaca noted not only how much harder the sport was than it looked, but the workout he was getting.

One family found a creative way to tilt curling more toward precision and general movement than speed with mops, water bottles and a target that can be taped to the floor. (This activity could also change up the way you practice your golf putts.)

If you want more strength work, roll a medicine ball toward your target and skip the broom portion or, as one physical education teacher found, you can try “Plank Curling” to work your core and abdominal strength:

Modified speed skating and skiing

Several YouTube channels have come up with entire Winter Olympics units. Front Range Physical Education does alpine skiing in a gymnasium using pool noodles for poles and old scarves for skis.

It’s more of a cross-country activity that tests coordination and gets kids moving:

You can compete at speed skating indoors in similar fashion with carpet squares or paper plates for skates and a circle of cones for the track. The skating motion works familiar kid (and parent) muscles in a different way:

Bobsled and luge with mats and rope

Bobsledding can be mimicked by pushing floor (gymnastics) mats on top of rectangular scooters through checkpoints designated by cones. The idea is controlled strength as kids work their legs and push.

The floor scooters can work by themselves for younger kids and, as they get older, one or two can sit on the mat while the others push:

If you want more strength training, and have a smaller space, tie an end of a rope to something sturdy (basketball hoop, pull-up bar, bleachers) and attach scooters together (like with indoor bobsled). Have kids or adults lie down on them and pull the untied end of the rope to move themselves forward:

Wear a bicyle helmet for safety.

Floor hockey

I never played ice hockey as a kid, but I lived for floor hockey. It seemed to be an equalizer, like Pickleball, for different levels of skill. While pickleball neutralizes the strength and speed elements of tennis, floor hockey takes away the advantage of superior skating.

Floor hockey tests your fitness and physical dexterity and competitiveness. Like with youth ice hockey, you can adapt the game to large or small spaces.

Backyard Olympics

Several years ago, my family spent a weekend at a resort in Pennsylvania that hosted its own Winter Olympics. It was adults and kids mixed together, with teams balanced for strength, size and speed, and it contained events such as tubing, tug-of-war and running through the snow in boots.

While some of the adults made a big deal about their teams winning (go figure), the idea was we can always create our own games with our ideas. Find a safe, snowy hill and glide down it on a sled or a tube. Make it a biathlon by getting up, picking up a nerf gun and shooting at targets on a tree.

Michele LaBotz, a sports medicine physician and the medical director of the athletic training program at the University of New England, says the best opportunity to develop kids’ basic movement skills is preschool and early grade school.

A variety of activities, even if they’re not formal sports, help them with control of their bodies, such as backward, forward, upside down, in-the-air and balancing motion. This can all be done running around the playground.

If you’re at the slopes, doing similar motions can fill you with hope. Brenna Huckaby, who lost her leg to cancer but became a future Paralympic snowboarder and swimsuit model, got her inspiration on a rehabilitative trip to Utah.

“The idea was, if we could ski down a mountain, then when we got home, we were able to conquer everyday life things,’ she told USA TODAY Sports last month.

Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His Coach Steve column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Yasiel Puig, the former All-Star outfielder who hasn’t played in the major leagues since 2019, was found guilty of lying to federal law enforcement officials about placing illegal bets with a gambling operation.

Puig, 35, was convicted by a jury in Los Angeles on one count of obstruction of justice and one count of making false statements. He faces maximum sentences of up to 10 years in federal prison for the obstruction charge and up to five years for the false statement. He remains free until a May 26 sentencing hearing.

The verdict in the Central District of California’s federal court concluded a 13-day trial in which prosecutors laid out a pattern, beginning in May 2019, of bets placed by Puig with bookmaker Wayne Joseph Nix, a 49-year-old former minor league pitcher.

Nix pleaded guilty in April 2022 to one count of conspiracy to operate an illegal gambling business and one count of subscribing to a false tax return awaits sentencing. Puig likely was not the target of federal investigators, yet in a January 2022 interrogation, was warned by investigators that lying under questioning was a crime.

In March 2022, prosecutors said, Puig sent a WhatsApp message to an associate of the bookie, admitting he lied to federal investigators. At his trial federal prosecutors presented an apparently voluminous record showing Puig lied to investigators.

Investigators say after Puig paid $200,000 to gain access to Nix-controlled gambling web sites, he placed 899 bets on tennis, football, and basketball games between July 4 and Sept. 29, 2019. Puig placed some of these bets at major league ballparks either before or after he played in games.

Puig played for both the Cincinnati Reds and Cleveland in the 2019 season, his last in the majors. He did not receive interest from MLB teams after allegations of sexual assault surfaced before the 2021 season. He has spent parts of the past five seasons playing in Mexico or Korea, along with winter league stints in the Dominican Republic or Venezuela.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

We’re only two days away from Super Bowl 60 in Santa Clara.

The New England Patriots and the Seattle Seahawks will meet Feb. 8 to decide who will win the Lombardi Trophy. After a week of festivities that included the 15th annual NFL Honors on Feb. 5, Super Bowl opening night, the Pro Bowl Games on Feb. 3 and more, it’s officially time to focus on the league’s annual finale.

USA TODAY Sports will provide the latest updates, highlights, news, quotes and more from Super Bowl week, leading up to Super Bowl 60 on Sunday. All times are Eastern.

Kliff Kingsbury to join LA Rams coaching staff

The Los Angeles Rams finished one win short of the Super Bowl this season, but will have one more offensive guru on the coaching staff for 2026. Multiple reports have former Washington Commanders offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury joining buddy Sean McVay on his coaching staff in 2026. Read more here.

– Michael Middlehurst-Schwartz

Seahawks’ ‘breakfast club’ beating Darnold, Kupp to work on the regular

Here’s a story you won’t find anywhere else. Three unheralded Seahawks defenders have made it a habit to be the first in the door at Seattle’s training facility over the past three years, even beating notorious early risers Cooper Kupp and Sam Darnold. USA TODAY NFL reporter Nate Davis has the lowdown on the group that Kupp jokingly claims lives at the Seahawks training facility. Read more here:

– Nate Davis

Meanwhile, in Italy: 2026 Winter Olympics opening ceremony is live

Indulge us a diversion from all things football, but there’s something else major happening in the sports world today. The opening ceremony of the 2026 Winter Olympics is live now, broadcast on NBC, with a rebroadcast at 8 p.m. ET Feb. 6.

You can follow USA TODAY’s ongoing Olympics coverage at usatoday.com/sports/olympics/ and follow live coverage of the opening ceremony here.

– Eric Larsen

Seahawks face big decisions on Walker III, Shaheed after Super Bowl 60

Two major offensive X factors for the Seattle Seahawks are entering free agency after the Feb. 8 Super Bowl – Kenneth Walker III and Rashid Shaheed. USA TODAY NFL insider Tyler Dragon has the lowdown on what both mean to the Seahawks, and what they’ve said about their futures with the team. Read more here.

– Tyler Dragon

How the Patriots rookies powered a Super Bowl run

Significant NFL turnarounds in recent years have followed a similar path to that of the Patriots. Last year, the Washington Commanders made the NFC championship game following a 4-13 campaign the year before. In 2023, the Houston Texans made a run to the divisional playoffs a year after going 3-13-1.

Like those teams, New England has a new coaching staff, which helped their turnaround to AFC champion. But it also has been an influx of new talent – especially rookies.

Top draft picks Will Campbell and TreVeyon Henderson played crucial roles in the Patriots’ season, as is expected. It’s not just a two-man rookie class. Read on for more on the fresh faces propelling the Patriots’ resurgence.

– Ayrton Ostly

Matthew Stafford: MVP and MVD? Watch his daughters laud dad in adorable video

Here’s an award anyone who’s ever answered to the name of ‘Daddy’ can appreciate. NFL MVP Matthew Stafford thought he was in for a film session when his family surprised him with a heartwarming video you just have to watch.

– Scooby Axson

Can you trust Madden NFL 26 to predict the Super Bowl 60 winner?

Per a USA TODAY analysis of Madden NFL video game picks dating back to 2004 — the first year publisher EA ran predictions — the simulation generally beats the odds. Madden has correctly predicted 13 of 22 Super Bowls for a 59% success rate, far eclipsing the 48% pick rate of the Vegas line during the same span, per Pro Football Reference. However, that success hasn’t come without its share of rough patches.

– Jared Beilby

Patriots’ Christian Gonzalez reps Colombia at Super Bowl 60

– Chris Bumbaca

Sonny Jurgensen, Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback, dies at age 91

Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback Sonny Jurgensen has passed away at the age of 91, the Washington Commanders announced Jan. 6. You can read the full story here.

– Scooby Axson

What makes Jaxon Smith-Njigba elite? Inside Seahawks WR’s route-running prowess

USA TODAY NFL insider Tyler Dragon has spent a lot of time with the Seattle Seahawks late this season while charting the ascendence of the 2025 NFL Offensive Player of the Year. Read here to learn more about how the third-year pro has compiled a record-setting season.

– Tyler Dragon

Jim Schwartz resigns as Cleveland Browns defensive coordinator

Hours after his star player, defensive end Myles Garrett, won Defensive Player of the Year, Browns defensive coordinator Jim Schwartz resigned after getting passed over for the team’s head coaching vacancy, according to multiple reports.

Read the full story here.

– Michael Middlehurst-Schwartz

Matthew Stafford, Drew Brees, Larry Fitzgerald lead NFL Honors highlights

The NFL handed out its annual hardware Feb. 5, with Los Angeles Rams QB Matthew Stafford claiming the league MVP title in one of the closest votes in the award’s history.

The much-discussed 2026 Pro Football Hall of Fame class was also revealed, with Drew Brees, Larry Fitzgerald, Adam Vinatieri, Luke Kuechly and Roger Craig getting the call. Catch up on USA TODAY Sports’ coverage of the night here:

  • Brees and Fitzgerald (not Belichick and Kraft) headline Hall of Fame class
  • NFL MVP Matthew Stafford announces he’ll return to play for Rams in 2026 season
  • Seahawks WR Jaxon Smith-Njigba named NFL Offensive Player of the Year
  • Browns’ Carson Schwesinger wins NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year Award
  • Tiffany Haddish mispronounces Patriots coach Mike Vrabel’s name at NFL Honors
  • Christian McCaffrey wins NFL Comeback Player of the Year Award
  • Mike Vrabel wins NFL Coach of the Year Award ahead of Super Bowl 60
  • Myles Garrett unanimously wins NFL Defensive Player of Year
  • Panthers WR Tetairoa McMillan wins NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year
  • 2026 NFL Honors awards: Live updates, results on MVP and more winners

– Eric Larsen

Patriots vs. Seahawks playoff record

The Patriots and Seahawks have met once in the playoffs. That came in Super Bowl 49, a tightly contested game New England won 28-24.

Patriots vs. Seahawks regular-season history

The Patriots and Seahawks have met 19 times in the regular season in NFL history. Seattle has gotten the better of New England across those matchups, posting an 11-8 record.

When did the Patriots and Seahawks last play?

The Patriots and Seahawks last met during Week 2 of the 2024 NFL season. Seattle earned a 23-20 overtime victory after Jason Myers made a walk-off 31-yard field goal to cap off an eight-play, 71-yard drive after New England went three-and-out on the opening possession of the extra frame.

How much do Super Bowl 60 tickets cost?

According to Ticketmaster’s official website, the average annual Super Bowl ticket resale prices range from $4,000 to $6,000 before fees.

As of the afternoon of Wednesday, Feb. 4, the average price of the cheapest single ticket across multiple resale websites (StubHub, Ticketmaster, SeatGeek, Vivid Seats, etc.) is $4,785 with all fees accounted for. Last year, the average price of the cheapest tickets from the same resale websites was $3,374, including fees.

When is the Super Bowl?

  • Date: Sunday, Feb. 8

Super Bowl 60 is set to kick off on Sunday, Feb. 8.

What teams are playing in Super Bowl 60?

  • Teams: New England Patriots vs. Seattle Seahawks

The New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks are set to play in the Super Bowl this year. The Patriots are the designated home team for the event at Levi’s Stadium.

Super Bowl odds for Patriots vs. Seahawks

The Seahawks remain favored to beat the Patriots in Super Bowl 60 as of Feb. 6, according to the BetMGM NFL odds.

  • Spread: Seahawks (-4.5)
  • Moneyline: Seahawks (-235); Patriots (+195)
  • Over/under: 45.5
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • Deion Sanders stated college players are now ‘athlete-students,’ not ‘student-athletes.’
  • Sanders called for a commissioner to govern college football and regulate NIL compensation.
  • He criticized the NCAA transfer portal’s timing, which created challenges for academic departments.

Colorado football coach Deion Sanders wants a commissioner to govern the new Wild West of college football and declared that college players are no longer student-athletes but instead are athlete-students.

Sanders said this on ESPN’s First Take on Friday, Feb. 6, after traveling to California’s Bay Area to do media interviews at the site of Super Bowl 60.  One of the show’s panelists, Ryan Clark, used the term “student-athlete” to ask him about how times have changed in college football, leading Sanders to interject and correct him.

“It’s athlete-student,” Sanders said. “Ain’t no student-athlete no more.”

Sanders noted his team recently had the highest grade-point average in the history of Colorado football in 2024 (3.011). But he criticized the timing of the transfer portal this year, when players could enter it from Jan. 2-16. Colorado started spring-semester classes Jan. 8, putting the school in a crunch as it tried to enroll more than 40 new transfers. The NCAA’s Division I Administrative Committee adopted the transfer portal dates last fall.

“How is it about the student-athletes when we have a portal at the time that we had?” Sanders asked. “Now our academic departments have to work their butts off even to get all these kids enrolled. That was tremendous. That was a tremendous task. And I thank our CU department for doing that. But (the NCAA is) not thinking about the academic part of the students. They’re thinking about the athletic parts, because that’s the part that provokes the most money.”

Deion Sanders calls for college football commissioner

Sanders also was asked about the state of college football in general with players earning money for their names, images and likenesses (NIL). He criticized how schools with the wealthiest donors have an edge and called for something similar to the NFL, which shares revenue with teams and is overseen by a commissioner. He said he loves that players are compensated but there “should be rules and guidelines for that compensation.”

“What the NIL is presenting is not sustainable,’ Sanders said. ‘Oftentimes it seems like you see the same consistency of teams winning and winning and winning because of the finances that some of the boosters and the donors can give. But that needs to be fixed, and we need some type of commissioner. And we need somebody to step up and make sure we’re doing this thing in unison, so that you don’t have certain teams that’s able to do well beyond this team. And you know this team is not going to win because of the lack thereof of finances.’

Deion Sanders has new distaste for NFL

Last year around this time, Sanders had flirted with the Dallas Cowboys when they had an opening for a new head coach. He has said before that he’d only be interested in such a job if he could coach his sons. But after what happened with his son Shedeur last year, he said he has no interest.

“None whatsoever,” he said. “What transpired with my son last year, ain’t no way in the world. Nah.”

Shedeur Sanders was projected as a first-round draft pick but fell all the way to the fifth round before getting picked by the Cleveland Browns. Some critics of the team believed the Browns weren’t giving Shedeur a fair shot until injuries paved the way for him to finish the season as the starting quarterback.

“I know what’s behind the curtains,” Sanders said. “I know all the bull junk that transpired.”

But he promised this year will be different for his family, including his Colorado team, which finished 3-9 in 2025.

“We back,” he said. “This year, ‘26 is ours. We’re gonna dominate this year from the top to the bottom.”

Who does Deion Sanders predict to win Super Bowl 60?

Sanders’ lack of interest in the NFL also apparently extends to Sunday’s Super Bowl. Before he finished his appearance on the show, Sanders was asked for his prediction on who would win the game between the Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots.

“I don’t care,” he said.

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • Actor Austin Butler is set to portray disgraced cyclist Lance Armstrong in a new film.
  • This upcoming movie is one of several films and documentaries made about Armstrong’s life.
  • Armstrong’s story of a hero’s fall from grace continues to attract filmmakers.

America didn’t know it needed yet another movie about Lance Armstrong. But it’s getting one anyway, this time with actor Austin Butler cast to portray the disgraced former cyclist.

Multiple Hollywood news outlets even have reported that the upcoming film has stirred up a “bidding war” among film studios despite the fact that filmgoers have seen this movie before, or at least different versions of it. Grab some popcorn and binge on this:

∎ An ESPN documentary film entitled “Lance” earned critical acclaim in 2020.

∎ Actor Ben Foster played Armstrong in the “The Program” in 2015.

∎ ‘Stop at Nothing: The Lance Armstrong Story” came out in 2014.

∎ ‘The Armstrong Lie” by director Alex Gibney debuted in 2013.

∎ ‘The World According to Lance’ predated his confession to doping when it was released in 2012.

Now comes another one with a slight twist. Film producer Scott Stuber has acquired Armstrong’s life rights, according to Deadline.

Armstrong, 54, didn’t return a message seeking comment. But he didn’t like the last film in which he starred – the one on ESPN that actor Chevy Chase thought was so good that he agreed to participate in a film on himself with the same director (Marina Zenovich).

Why is there another movie about Lance Armstrong?

As far back as 2013, USA TODAY Sports posed the question: Why are film producers and book publishers falling over themselves to retell Armstrong’s story?

The answer is that it’s an epic tale about the rise of an American hero and cancer survivor who then became a villain after his lies and bullying finally caught up to him and led to his downfall. Armstrong won seven Tour de France titles but got stripped of all of them after using banned drugs and blood transfusions to boost himself on the bike. He denied his doping for years until he finally confessed to Oprah Winfrey in January 2013.

‘Lance’s story, his mythic story, was maybe the greatest sports story of all time,” Gibney told USA TODAY Sports in 2013. “That’s pretty big, and then the fall from grace was precipitous. That kind of Shakespearean or Greek tragedy is appealing to filmmakers.’

The new movie about Armstrong is set to be directed by Edward Berger, who also directed the 2024 film Conclave. That was another movie about secrets and scandal but was based on a book of fiction. The latest Lance film will be based on a true story, which includes his many lies.

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

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They shine like the real thing, but how much gold is there really in the medals athletes will lift on the podium at the 2026 Winter Olympics?

Not much, according to the organizers of the Games in Italy. 

A total of 245 gold medals will be awarded to winners of 116 Olympic and 79 Paralympic events over the next few weeks at the Milano Cortina Games.

Just six grams of the 506-gram gold medals contain gold; the medals otherwise consist of silver, organizers said. There are about 450 grams in a pound. 

The metals used to make the awards are highly refined. The gold medals consist of 99.9% pure gold and 99% pure silver.

According to organizers, the silver medals consist of 500 grams of 99% silver and the bronze medals consist of 420 grams of copper. Organizers don’t specify the purity of the bronze medals. 

How big are the medals?  

The Olympic medals have a diameter of about 80 millimeters and are around 10 millimeters thick, according to organizers.

In measurements commonly used in the U.S., the medals are about three inches in diameter and over a third of an inch thick.

What’s behind the design?

The medals being awarded to athletes at Milano Cortina are designed to appear to have two offset halves.

According to organizers, the halves ‘symbolise the culmination of the athlete’s journey and all those who have walked beside them along the way.’

The medals were developed by designers at the organizing committee of the games in Italy. 

What are the medals worth?

Gold was valued at $160 a gram on Feb. 6 during the opening ceremony. Silver was valued at about $2.50 a gram.

Each individual gold medal then consists of about $960 of gold and $1,250 of silver for a total of $2,210. 

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Shaun White is still contributing to the 2026 Milano-Cortina Winter Olympics despite retiring from competition.

The legendary snowboarder and three-time American gold medalist is serving as an expert commentator on NBC for the Olympic Games in Italy, also contributing to the opening ceremony on Feb. 6 from San Siro Stadium in Milan. The five-time Olympian retired after the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics.

White rose to prominence after he won the gold medal in the snowboarding half-pipe event at the 2006 Torino Winter Olympics when he was 19 years old.

Here’s everything to know of White, who’s back at the Olympics, albeit in a different form:

Who is Shaun White?

White, one of the most recognizable extreme sports athletes in the world, is a five-time Olympian and three-time medalist, all of which are golds, which is the most by any Olympic snowboarder.

White also has the record for most X Games gold medals with 15. He has 23 total X Games medals, including five silvers and three bronze wins.

The 39-year-old retired after the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, where he failed to medal. The 2026 Milano-Cortina Winter Olympics are his first since ending his athletic career, and he said he’s focused on touring multiple different events to which he’s unaccustomed.

‘This is all an exciting time for me, from announcing and being a part of the Olympics in this new way,’ White told Olympics.com. ‘I am excited to take it all in. See the different events like ice skating, skiing, half pipe, big air, obviously snowboarding. I’m just going try to see everything honestly, that’s my goal.’

He also said he hopes to get Snoop Dogg on a snowboard.

‘I’m trying to get Snoop,’ White said. ‘Snoop on a snowboard is my goal. We need him on the board, and I’m going to try to do that.’

White is arguably as famous in American culture as he is as an athlete. He was the focus of two Shaun White snowboarding video games in 2009 and 2010, before a skateboarding Shaun White game released in 2011. He also had an exclusive clothing line at Target stores.

Is Shaun White competing at the 2026 Winter Olympics?

White is not competing at the 2026 Winter Olympics, as he retired from competition after the 2022 Beijing Olympic Games.

He is, however, on site at the 2026 Milano-Cortina Winter Olympics as an expert commentator with NBC. He was among the NBC color analysts for the opening ceremony on Feb. 6.

How many medals does Shaun White have?

White has three medals across five Olympic appearances, all of which are gold. He never won a silver or bronze medal, and all three of his gold medal wins came in the snowboard halfpipe event.

His first gold medal came at the 2006 Torino Winter Olympics, which he won at 19 years old. He repeated in the halfpipe event in 2010, taking home gold at the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics. He didn’t medal in Sochi in 2014 but responded with a gold medal win in 2018 in Pyeongchang after a historic final run put him atop the podium.

White said he nearly retired in the leadup to the 2018 Olympics after an injury in training, but eventually won gold with the trick that led to him being hospitalized in 2017.

‘(The third gold) was so hard to get,’ he told on TheToday Show in 2017. ‘On my way to that Olympics, I had this horrible accident where I ripped my face open, 62 stitches, pulmonary contusions, like I’m bleeding in my lungs.’

White didn’t medal in 2022 and retired after the Games.

Shaun White age

White is 39 years old, as he was born on Sept. 3, 1986. His first appearance at the Winter Olympics came in the 2006 Torino Olympic Games.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The lighting of the Olympic cauldron has become an important part of every Olympic Games over the past century, serving as the symbolic home for the Olympic flame and a natural ending to the Olympic torch relay. The opening ceremony of the 2026 Winter Olympics made history in that regard, with two cauldrons lit to close out the festivities on Friday, Feb. 6 in Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo.

Decorated former Italian Olympic alpine skiiers Alberto Tonga and Deborah Compagnoni used the Olympic torch to light the cauldron in Milan, while gold medal winner current Olympic downhill skiier Sofia Goggia of Italy simultaneously ignited the flame within the cauldron within the mountains of Cortina d’Ampezzo.

The Olympic flame, after two months of an Olympic torch relay, fist appeared Milan’s San Siro Stadium towards the end of Friday’s opening ceremony at the Milan Cortina Games, accompanied by Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli singing the opera song, ‘Nussun Dorma,’ backed by an orchestra. The drama built from there with an elaborate performance featuring Italian rapper Ghali and an appearance by actress Charlize Theron to present a message of peace.

There were two Olympic cauldrons lit simultaneously for the first time this year, with one at Arco della Pace in Milan and another in Piazza Dibona in Cortina d’Ampezzo, since the 2026 Winter Games are spread out across 16 venues in multiple areas of Northern Italy.

The custom design of the cauldrons ‘pay homage to the sun as the primary source of life, energy and renewal,’ according to Olympic organizers, and ‘the design draws inspiration from the genius of Leonardo da Vinci and his famous Knots, geometric interlacings that symbolize the harmony between nature and human ingenuity.’

The lead-up to the 2026 Winter Olympics torch relay began on Nov. 26, 2025 in Olympia, Greece with the lighting of the Olympic flame, which then arrived in Rome on Dec. 4. The torch relay started on Dec. 6 and arrived in Milan on Feb. 5 ahead of the opening ceremony. Snoop Dogg, the stars of HBO’s ‘Heated Rivalry,’ former AC Milan and Inter Milan soccer star Zlatan Ibrahimovic are among the more than 1,000 people to serve as 2026 Winter Olympics torchbearers over the past two months.

The Olympic flames within the two cauldrons will be extinguished as part of the closing ceremony on Feb. 22.

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The largest delegation participating in the 2026 Winter Olympics in Italy will be Team USA with 232 athletes competing in 16 disciplines, the largest the nation has ever sent to compete in a Winter Games.

Team USA’s 232 Olympians are among some 2,900 athletes competing at the Milano Cortina Games during the next two weeks. A total of 92 national Olympic committees sent athletes to the games, spanning the globe from Madagascar to Iceland. Committees don’t necessarily represent countries; for example, the committee for the U.S. territory of Puerto Rico is sending one athlete.

The largest delegations after the U.S. are Canada with 211 athletes, host country Italy with 195 and Germany with 189. Among the smallest: Venezuela sent a cross-country skier; Saudi Arabia sent an alpine skier and a cross-country skier; and San Marino, the microstate located over 200 miles to the south of Milan, sent an alpine skier. Around 20 athletes with Russian and Belarussian passports will compete as ‘Individual Neutral Athletes,’ or AINs for short.

Milano Cortina will feature eight disciplines or sports, one more than any other Winter Games as ski mountaineering makes its debut. But the 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympics featured the greatest number of Olympians for a Winter Games with over 2,900 athletes.

When will the U.S. walk in the opening ceremony?

At the opening ceremony on Feb. 6 Team USA will walk third to last.

Organizers of the Games have a unique formula for deciding the order athletes from the 92 committees will walk in the opening ceremony parades taking place at San Siro Stadium in Milan, Livigno and Predazzo.

First up in the parade of nations is always Greece in reference to the games’ legendary origins in competitions between city-states nearly 3,000 years ago.

The host country always walks last; the country hosting the next Winter Games – France in 2030, in this case – walks second to last; and the United States, which hosts the 2034 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, goes third to last.

Other committees typically proceed in the ceremony according to alphabetical order.

Countries at 2026 Winter Olympics

Here’s the full list of every country participating in the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milano Cortina, including the number of participating athletes for each country:

  • Albania (4)
  • Andorra (7)
  • Argentina (8)
  • Armenia (5)
  • Australia (53)
  • Austria (116)
  • Azerbaijan (2)
  • Belgium (30)
  • Benin (1)
  • Bolivia (1)
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina (5)
  • Brazil (14)
  • Bulgaria (20)
  • Canada (211)
  • Chile (4)
  • China (125)
  • Chinese Taipei (8)
  • Colombia (1)
  • Croatia (14)
  • Cyprus (2)
  • Czech Republic (115)
  • Denmark (39)
  • Ecuador (1)
  • Eritrea (1)
  • Estonia (31)
  • Finland (101)
  • France (157)
  • Georgia (8)
  • Germany (189)
  • Great Britain (53)
  • Greece (5)
  • Guinea-Bissau (1)
  • Haiti (2)
  • Hong Kong (4)
  • Hungary (15)
  • Iceland (4)
  • Indiana (2)
  • Individual Neutral Athletes (20)
  • Iran (4)
  • Ireland (4)
  • Israel (9)
  • Italy (195)
  • Jamaica (6)
  • Japan (196)
  • Kazakhstan (36)
  • Kenya (1)
  • Kosovo (2)
  • Kyrgyzstan (2)
  • Latvia (67)
  • Lebanon (2)
  • Liechtenstein (7)
  • Lithuania (17)
  • Luxembourg (2)
  • Madagascar (2)
  • Malaysia (1)
  • Malta (1)
  • Mexico (5)
  • Moldova (5)
  • Monaco (1)
  • Mongolia (3)
  • Montenegro (2)
  • Morocco (2)
  • Netherlands (39)
  • New Zealand (17)
  • Nigeria (1)
  • North Macedonia (4)
  • Norway (80)
  • Pakistan (1)
  • Philippines (2)
  • Poland (59)
  • Portugal (3)
  • Puerto Rico (1)
  • Romania (29)
  • San Marino (1)
  • Saudi Arabia (2)
  • Serbia (3)
  • Singapore (1)
  • Slovakia (53)
  • Slovenia (37)
  • South Africa (5)
  • South Korea (71)
  • Spain (20)
  • Sweden (110)
  • Switzerland (175)
  • Thailand (3)
  • Trinidad and Tobago (6)
  • Turkey (8)
  • Ukraine (45)
  • United Arab Emirates (2)
  • United States (232)
  • Uruguay (1)
  • Uzbekistan (2)
  • Venezuela (1)
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